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French Grammar

7. Word Order

7.1 Declarative Sentences

  • Introduction

  • 1. Pronouns
  • 1.1 Personal Pronouns

  • 1.2 Genitive

  • 2. Nouns
  • 2.1 Articles

  • 2.2 Plurals

  • 3. Verbs
  • 3.1 Être & Avoir

  • 3.2 Types of Verbs

  • 3.3 Tenses

  • 3.4 Useful Verbal Phrases

  • 4. Numbers
  • 4.1 Cardinal Numbers

  • 4.2 Ordinal Numbers

  • 4.3 Uses of Numbers

  • 5. Prepositions
  • 5.1 Prepositions of Place

  • 6. Adjectives
  • 6.1 Formation of Adjectives

  • 7. Word Order
  • 7.1 Declarative Sentences

  • 7.2 Interrogative Sentences

  • 8. Adverbs
  • 8.1 Formation of Adverbs

  • Introduction

  • 1. Pronouns

  • 1.1 Personal Pronouns

  • 1.2 Genitive

  • 2. Nouns

  • 2.1 Articles

  • 2.2 Plurals

  • 3. Verbs

  • 3.1 Être & Avoir

  • 3.2 Types of Verbs

  • 3.3 Tenses

  • 3.4 Useful Verbal Phrases

  • 4. Numbers

  • 4.1 Cardinal Numbers

  • 4.2 Ordinal Numbers

  • 4.3 Uses of Numbers

  • 5. Prepositions

  • 5.1 Prepositions of Place

  • 6. Adjectives

  • 6.1 Formation of Adjectives

  • 7. Word Order

  • 7.1 Declarative Sentences

  • 7.2 Interrogative Sentences

  • 8. Adverbs

  • 8.1 Formation of Adverbs

The basic word order in a declarative sentence in French is the same as in English: Subject + Verb + Object. 

SubjectVerbObject
Edwardaimele foot.
Ilregardela télé.
EllemangeSon sandwich.
Nousne mangeons pasde viande.

To form a negative sentence in French, you need to add the negation words ne…pas  on each side of the verb. Ne is shortened to n’ before a verb starting with vowel or a silent h. Ne is often dropped altogether in spoken French:

Je n’aime pas cuisiner.

I don’t like cooking.

On ne mange pas de viande.

We don’t eat meat.

If there is an auxiliary verb, the negation words ne…pas go on each side of the auxiliary verb:

Nous n’avons pas mangé de petit-déjeuner.

We haven’t eaten breakfast.

The following negation words occupy the same place as ne… pas on each side of the verb:

ne…personne = “nobody / not…anybody”:

Manon n’invite personne chez elle.

Manon doesn’t invite anyone to her place.

ne…plus =  ” not anymore – no longer”:

Tu n’habites plus en Italie?

You’re not living in Italy anymore?

ne…rien =  “nothing / not…anything”:

Il ne veut rien.

He doesn’t want anything.

Learn French
Beginning 7.2 Interrogative Sentences
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